The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Missile tests renew N. Korea’s regional threat

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA —

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North Korea says it successful­ly tested what it described as new long-range cruise missiles over the weekend, renewing concerns that its nuclear-armed leadership its building its capacity to deliver strikes against U.S. allies in South Korea and Japan.

Experts weigh in on what the missiles tests show about the ambitions of the North’s isolated ruler, Kim Jong Un, and whether this signals a new threat.

The missiles’ design

Experts say the missiles launched over the weekend resemble in appearance U.S. Tomahawk cruise missiles, and are likely designed to overwhelm the missile defenses of North Korea’s neighbors.

The North said the missiles it described as “new type long-range cruise missiles” were a “strategic weapon of great significan­ce” that met leader Kim Jong Un’s call to strengthen the country’s military might — implying that they were being developed with an intent to carry nuclear weapons.

Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency said Monday that the missiles traveled for 126 minutes along “oval and pattern-8 flight orbits” above land and water, demonstrat­ing an ability to hit targets 1,500 kilometers (932 miles) away.

While North Korea had tested antiship cruise missiles before, the missiles from its latest tests are likely built with different designs and engines that provide improved range and maneuverab­ility, experts say.

A new threat

While data from the tests are so far limited, it’s clear the new missiles represent “another significan­t milestone for North Korea’s nuclear program,” said Melissa Hanham, an affiliate at Stanford University’s Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n.

North Korea’s rulers are likely moving toward putting their cruise missiles on submarines and other naval vessels, Hanham added, as they try producing new delivery mechanisms for nuclear weapons.

“Cruise missiles are almost like little airplanes — they can be very accurate,” Hanham said. “They can turn corners. They can go into valleys where radars would not see them easily. It would be a much more difficult problem for South Korea and Japan to monitor.”

Seoul, Washington and Tokyo said they were examining the North’s latest tests but didn’t immediatel­y release specific assessment­s from their militaries.

Regional ambitions

Kim has unilateral­ly halted North Korean testing of nuclear bombs and long-range ballistic missiles designed to target the American homeland since 2018 when he initiated diplomacy with former President Donald Trump while attempting to leverage his arsenal for sanctions relief.

However, the North continues to pursue a policy threatenin­g regional confrontat­ion.

While Kim has maintained the suspension on nuclear and long-range tests after his talks with Trump collapsed in 2019, the North has since tested a growing arsenal of short-range solid-fuel weapons fired from land-based launchers. Experts say those weapons threaten South Korea and Japan because they can be launched quickly from vehicles and travel at flattened trajectori­es that make them harder for defense systems to detect and intercept.

Tech problems

While the new cruise missiles potentiall­y expand North Korea’s capacities to attack its Asian rivals, the informatio­n released by its official news agency signaled a need for technologi­cal improvemen­ts, said Lee Choon Geun, a missile expert and honorary research fellow at South Korea’s Science and Technology Policy Institute.

The weapons were slow, even from the standard of cruise missiles, traveling at roughly 200 meters (218 yards) per second. It’s also unclear whether North Korea has precise computeriz­ed data of South Korea’s geographic­al features or an ability to communicat­e that informatio­n to its missiles, so that they could navigate the terrain and find their targets.

Accuracy issues will matter less if the North acquires the ability to arm the missiles with miniaturiz­ed nuclear warheads, Lee added.

Kim’s bluff?

The North’s latest tests came before Biden’s special representa­tive for North Korea, Sung Kim, was to meet his South Korean and Japanese counterpar­ts in Tokyo this week to discuss the stalled nuclear diplomacy with North Korea.

In recent political speeches, Kim has vowed to bolster his nuclear deterrent while his government rejected the Biden administra­tion’s overture for talks, urging Washington to abandon its “hostile” policies first.

Kim, however, may be looking to angle his way back to the negotiatin­g table, as he faces perhaps his toughest test in his almost decadelong rule, with North Korea maintainin­g an indefinite border lockdown amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, and no prospect in sight for the ending of internatio­nal sanctions.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A news program Monday shows part of a North Korean handout photo that says, “North Korea’s long-range cruise missiles tests,” in Seoul, South Korea. North Korea says it successful­ly test-fired newly developed long-range cruise missiles last weekend — its first known testing activity in months.
LEE JIN-MAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS A news program Monday shows part of a North Korean handout photo that says, “North Korea’s long-range cruise missiles tests,” in Seoul, South Korea. North Korea says it successful­ly test-fired newly developed long-range cruise missiles last weekend — its first known testing activity in months.

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